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      Humza Yousaf’s unravelling tenure shows how short and brutish political lives have become

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · 4 days ago - 17:46

    Scotland’s first minister and SNP leader’s demise shows Westminster does not have the monopoly of chaos and ineptitude

    It must be contagious. Just when you thought Westminster might have the monopoly on incompetence and chaos, along comes Humza Yousaf, Scotland’s first minister, saying: “Hold my Diet Coke.” Anything the Tories can do south of the border, the Scottish National party can manage north of it. We are in a new political era where the life span of politicians is measured in units of Liz Truss. Or lettuces. So Yousaf reaching seven and half Trusses – or approximately 54 lettuces. Which, all things considered, is fairly respectable. If a lot less than he had hoped.

    Last Thursday, Yousaf had consciously uncoupled from the Scottish Green party . “You’re dumped,” he had announced, looking rather pleased with himself. It had been meant to be a power play. To ditch the Greens before they ditched him. A show of strength that the SNP could survive as a minority government without their coalition partner.

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      The Guardian view on Labour and Brexit: a subtle but important strategic pivot | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 17 April - 17:32

    The opposition is right to recognise that a dangerous international climate demands closer security partnership with the EU

    For most of the period since the decision was taken to leave the EU, British politicians have overestimated how much thought the continent gives to Brexit. Once shock at the referendum result receded, relations with the UK came to be seen as a technical problem to be solved by hard-headed negotiation.

    At critical moments, when deadlines neared, Brexit leapt up the agenda. After the treaties were signed, they dropped right down, overtaken by the other issues facing a large bloc with many borders and problems. That represents a perverse kind of victory for Boris Johnson and his chief negotiator, David Frost. The deal they signed was so skewed against British interests that Brussels has little incentive to reopen the settlement.

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      Boris Johnson and Tony Abbott: the double act you knew you never needed | Zoe Williams

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 11 April - 18:51 · 1 minute

    Needy former UK PM visibly struggled when some of Abbott’s (bonkers) points drew a bigger cheer than his at rightwing event

    A couple of housekeeping notes before we head to the meeting of titan minds that was Boris Johnson and Tony Abbott at the Canada Strong and Free Network. CSFN is a kind of Canadian PopCon , where the right wing go to cheer each other on as they curse the woke. Except, unlike so many alt-right talking shops, it’s got almost 20 years under its belt. There are probably people in it who remember a time before wokery, when political correctness had merely gone mad. We will hear a lot of words that sometimes seem to describe the throughline from early 00s conservatism to what we see before us today, but if you tried to actually draw that line, it would look like the cloud of hair and flies around Pig-Pen’s head .

    The disgraced former UK prime minister no longer looks like a man whose Spads have ruffled his hair on purpose before he steps on to the stage, for “charm”. His dishevelment feels much more authentic and bedded in, like a man who’s already been kicked out but doesn’t know it yet because he hasn’t been home, and stands in contrast to the pin-neat Tony Abbott, who also has a neater, less contradictory mind.

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      Boris Johnson calls Rishi Sunak’s smoking ban ‘absolutely nuts’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 11 April - 10:04

    Speaking at Canada event, former PM laments state of Tory party saying it is ‘mad’ that party of Winston Churchill is ‘banning cigars’

    Boris Johnson has attacked Rishi Sunak’s smoking ban , calling it “absolutely nuts” in a lament about the state of the Conservative party in Britain.

    Speaking at an event in Canada on Wednesday night, Johnson said it was “mad” that the party of Winston Churchill was “banning cigars”.

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      Michael Gove admits to ‘moral cowardice’ during Brexit campaign

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 5 April - 07:52

    Levelling up secretary says he should have been upfront with then-PM David Cameron about his role in the leave campaign

    The levelling up secretary, Michael Gove, has admitted “moral cowardice” during the Brexit campaign by not being upfront with David Cameron about his role in the leave campaign.

    In an interview for the Political Currency podcast with George Osborne and Ed Balls, Gove said he was initially reluctant to take a prominent role in the campaign, but had been persuaded to by the Vote Leave campaign coordinator, Dominic Cummings.

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      Britain’s levelling up agenda was stymied from the very start

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 12:00

    Inherent flaws and political churn doomed Boris Johnson’s signature policy – and it was hobbled through bureaucracy and high inflation

    Last February, the Treasury lost patience with Michael Gove.

    The levelling up secretary had just given a speech in Manchester during which he announced £30m to pay for improvements to substandard housing . Officials had already blocked him from using that speech to announce a larger pot of money for local authorities, and then they decided to stop him allocating any capital spending of £30m or more without Treasury approval.

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      ‘We’re forgotten about here’: the broken promises of levelling up

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 12:00

    Five years after the Tories won over the ‘red wall’ with a pledge to restore deprived areas, voters in the north-east say they’ve given up waiting for change

    Two days after his landslide election victory in 2019, Boris Johnson practically crowdsurfed into Sedgefield cricket club. Jubilant fans at the venue in Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham, craned for a photo, one thrust upon him their family pet, and another begged him to sign a copy of the Northern Echo, headlined: “Tory tsunami from the Wear to the Tees”.

    “There was an absolutely huge buzz in the place,” said Jean Gillespie, 69, in the same function room this week, whipping out her phone to show a picture with the former prime minister: “I got a snog and a selfie.”

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      ‘Potentially serious impropriety’: Labour questions Johnson’s Venezuela meeting

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 19:25

    Former PM’s meeting with President Maduro, in capacity as hedge fund consultant, is under further scrutiny

    Labour is demanding answers over what the party said was “potentially serious impropriety” by Boris Johnson after it emerged that the former prime minister met the Venezuelan president in his role as a consultant for a hedge fund.

    Nick Thomas-Symonds, the shadow Cabinet Office minister said there were concerns that Johnson may have breached the ministerial code in a letter to Oliver Dowden, the deputy prime minister and Cabinet Office minister.

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      The Guardian view on the future of the BBC: uncertain but necessary and all to play for | Editorial

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 18:21 · 1 minute

    Hearts and minds must be won in the run-up to the renegotiation of a charter that will determine the next decade of public broadcasting

    With just three years to go until the renewal of its charter, after 14 years of political assaults and in a time of convulsive change, the BBC has to prove its fitness for the next 10 years of public broadcasting. Hence a wide-ranging speech this week by its director general, Tim Davie, outlining the way forward. Opinions vary as to whether this was a timely show of mettle or a once great institution gasping its last. What was clear was that the path ahead will involve yet more swingeing cuts on top of the £500m annual reduction already forced on the corporation by a two-year licence fee freeze – which ends next month – compounded by inflation.

    The breadth of the challenge facing the corporation was underscored by a trio of core objectives designed to sprinkle reassurance in all political directions: the pursuit of truth with no agenda; an emphasis on British storytelling; and a mission to bring people together. All three may be admirable, but the latter two were somewhat undermined by a podcast interview with the showrunner of Doctor Who, for decades a standout example of British storytelling that brings people together. Talking about the value of a production partnership struck with Disney two years ago, Russell T Davies said that it was crucial to the show’s survival, because the end of the BBC was “undoubtedly on its way in some shape or form”.

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